However, after I tried his code, I find that LaTeX is unable to automatically hyphenate any word under the user-defined environment \Cthulhu. I think the reason of such disability is due to the use of turnbox, which turns each word by a random angle, rather than turning each letter. This is just my guess. Anyway, without hyphenation, the document looks odd and not beautiful.

My question:

How can I enable automatic hyphenation for the Cthulhu-style's document provided by the user doncherry?

Based on the answer from doncherry, how can I turn each letter by a random angle, rather than turning each word please?

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– percusseJul 24 '12 at 8:54

10

Would a Cthulhu-worshipping madman hyphenate his handwriting? Maybe you should use \raggedright instead.
– JellbyJul 24 '12 at 9:05

1

Sorry, what I said was "Cthulhu-style's document", rather than "Cthulhu-worshipping madman handwriting". I am sure that there are some normal-men who do hyphenate their article.
– c tJul 24 '12 at 9:24

Hello, David! Thank you for posting your solution. Could you put some comments on your code please? I don't understand what you are doing. Is your code able to rotate each letter by a random angle, rather than rotating each word? Moreover, I was saying to enable AUTOMATIC hyphenation. However, what you did is to hyphenate manually. I don't think you can manually hyphenate some long document with 50 pages. Thank you very much, David!
– c tJul 24 '12 at 23:28

well it's semi-automatic hyphenation. You need to mark the possible hyphention points but tex still chooses automatically where hyphens are needed. It's not really a problem in a long document, even in that short one, I just globally replaced madman by \foo{mad\-man} using my editor. As is you need \foo and can only mark one point per word, although that is just to make the coding easier. But it would be much harder to not mark the hyphenation points.
– David CarlisleJul 25 '12 at 6:58

In a long document, there are thousands of words that you need globally to replace, and the more important is that without checking on each line of the document, you don't know which word you need to globally replace. This would be a too tedious job. I don't think your method works. However, thank you very much, David!
– c tJul 26 '12 at 22:44

If you would really set more than a page in that style you should put a health warning on the front cover. You surely are not really planning to set thousands of words randomly mis-aligned? One page as a joke, perhaps!
– David CarlisleJul 27 '12 at 0:26

I think if rotate each letter by a random angle rather than rotating each word by using turnbox, then the feature of automatic hyphenation can be enabled by TeX.
– c tJul 27 '12 at 0:57